A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, February 28, 2013
The Hermitic Crisis
Another
milestone in the Rajapaksa plan
to control every aspect of Lankan life has been reached. 4,000 school principals
have been ordered to undergo 45 days of military training and receive military
titles. “The letters sent out by the Sri Lanka Cadet Corps…state that officials
of the Sri Lanka Administrative Service who hold the post of principal and those
in Grades I and II of the principal’s service have been asked to attend the
interviews on March 4, 5 and 6.” (Daily
Mirror –
27.2.2013).
Does
the Cadet Corp have a right to send orders to school principals? Obviously
not;Sri Lankahas a volunteer army and ordering civilians to undergo military
training or accept military titles does not accord with the term ‘voluntary’.
But, given the climate of fear permeating the country, no principal is likely to
refuse.
Seeking
redress from this judiciary will be an exercise in insanity.
Once
all school principals have been turned into uniformed sheep, it will be the turn
of other SLAAS officers. Once the entire civil service has been militarised, the
Rajapaksas will turn their attention towards the private sector.
In
a democracy, the military or the defence ministry cannot order school
principals. In Rajapaksa Sri Lanka,Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa can order anyone. And few will dare disobey a regime which
treated its own chief
justice with such rank injustice.
Juxtapose
this latest measure of militarization with the appointment of Presidential
Sibling Basil
Rajapaksa as the National Organiser of the SLFP and the composite it
stark: the Rajapaksas are out to control everyone and dominate everything. Their
appetites are becoming more voracious, their reach longer, their sweep wider and
their grip tighter.
Where
is the Opposition?
The
Rampaging Rajapaksas and the Slumbering Opposition
At
the BASL election, the pro-Rajapaksa candidate went down to a stunning defeat.
Thanks to the 18thAmendment,
the Rajapaksas do not have to fear a similar fate at any national
election.
The
18th Amendment was the single most anti-democratic piece of
legislation implemented by the Rajapaksas. It removed presidential term-limits,
enhanced presidential powers and turned the Elections Commissioner and the IGP
into Presidential minions. The 17th Amendment had
given the Elections Commissioner some teeth and the police a little elbow room
to uphold the law. The 18th Amendment disempowered the Elections
Commissioner and subjugated the police, thereby rendering stage-managed
elections with pre-conceived outcomes not only possible but also partially
legal.
The
18th Amendment was introduced soon after the Rajapaksas won two
national elections and their popularity was near the zenith. But the Siblings were
clearly able to envisage a time when economic hardships would cause their
Southern base to erode, making it impossible to win elections by fair means
(real hunger will defeat ‘patriotism’). They also realised that the SLFP will
begin to assert itself, as Mahinda Rajapaksa’s second term wore out. The
18th Amendment enabled the Siblings to crush the SLFP and dig their
claws deeper into the Lankan state. Less than three years later, the
transformation of the Lankan state into the fiefdom of a single family is almost
complete.
Sans the
18th Amendment, the impeachment and the militarization of civil
spaces would not have happened; and a post-Rajapaksa future would have been just
a few years away.
The
UNP’s mass base is still huge; it has the potential to challenge Rajapaksa-power
eletorally, assuming the party has a new leader who is more dynamic than Ranil
Wickremesinghe and more dependable than Sajith
Premadasa. Sadly, the UNP is more likely to consume itself in an
endless leadership struggle, with Ranil Wickremesinghe clinging to party
leadership and Sajith Premadasa making ineffectual efforts to dislodge him. The
Rajapaksas would want to keep the UNP marooned in this politico-electoral
wasteland for as long as possible. So long as the UNP remains fractious, it will
be incapable of focusing on the main enemy: the Rajapaksa Siblings and their
quasi-totalitarian power-project.
Plus
the Siblings will be able to play one side of the UNP against the other,
whenever necessary.
The
JVP has been severely weakened by the Rajapaksa-orchestrated schism (the
Siblings are excellent at dividing parties, organisations, and communities; the
continuing antics of the BBS being the best case in point). The JVP is also
caught in a time-wrap. It seems to believe that sooner or later Mahinda
Rajapaksa will reach his JR
Jayewardene moment; thatIndiaand the West will pressurise the regime
to devolve power to the Tamils and the Siblings will succumb. The JVP is waiting
for that happy hour, to wrest back the ‘patriotic’ banner from the Rajapaksas
and to resume the familiar anti-Indian/Imperialist/devolution struggle. What the
party does not realise is that 1987 cannot be replicated because the national,
regional and international conditions which made it possible have changed. The
war is over, the Tiger is dead andIndiawill not – cannot – use the ‘invasion’
threat again. The world of 1987 had two super powers (though one was ailing) and
both backed Indian policy onSri Lankaunconditionally.Chinawas not even a major
regional player then. Not only did the Jayewardene administration lack a
powerful international patron; it was also being challenged internally by a
reunited and rejuvenated opposition. Just a couple of months before the Accord,
the squabbling opposition came together to demand national elections, with
arch-enemies Sirima
Bandaranaike and Vijaya
Kumaratunga sharing a stage.
1987
cannot come again because the objective conditions which enabled it cannot be
recreated. The JVP is wasting its time, daydreaming and waiting for imperialist
threats when it should be focusing on the anti-Rajapaksa struggle.
The
Tamils are cowed. The Muslims are being terrorised with attacks on their very
existence. Perhaps the only viable challenger to Rajapaksa-power within the
SLFP, Maithripala
Sirisena, has negated himself thanks to the moronic conduct of his
son. By seeking Rajapaksa help to save his son, Minister Sirisena has placed
himself under the Rajapaksa thumb. Internationally, the Siblings are in some
trouble; unfortunately, despots cannot be dislodged by global
resolutions/sanctions, in the absence of a combative national opposition.
The
trade union movement still retains some capacity to resist the Rajapaksas, as
the victorious struggle against the private sector pension scam demonstrated.
This capacity must be strengthened, and alliances formed with other sectors
(fishermen, farmers, students) and across ethno-religious and party lines. Since
opposition unity is impossible at the top, the only alterative is to form united
fronts at the middle and grassroots levels. This unity can initially be
issue-based and then, hopefully, permeate upwards, creating a more general and
national coming-together of anti-Rajapaksa elements.
As
the economic conditions in the Sinhala-South worsen, and the opposition
vacillates, a section of the military can step into the breach. Since generals
are co-opted, this intervention can take the form of a Colonels’ or even a
Sergeants’ Coup, ushering a new rule which is more anti-democratic,
anti-minority, anti-Western and Sinhala populist than even the Rajapaksas.
Rampaging
Rajapaksas and a slumbering opposition have turned the Lankan crisis into a
hermitic one, with no discernible way out.